Molecular Medicine

SCIE-ISI SCOPUS (1994-2023)

  1528-3658

 

 

Cơ quản chủ quản:  SPRINGER , Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

Lĩnh vực:
Molecular BiologyMolecular MedicineGenetics (clinical)Genetics

Các bài báo tiêu biểu

Hypertrophic Scarring and Keloids: Pathomechanisms and Current and Emerging Treatment Strategies
Tập 17 Số 1-2 - Trang 113-125 - 2011
Gerd G. Gauglitz, Hans Christian Körting, T. Pavicic, Thomas Ruzicka, Marc G. Jeschke
Protein Aggregation in the Brain: The Molecular Basis for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases
Tập 14 Số 7-8 - Trang 451-464 - 2008
G. Brent Irvine, Omar M. A. El‐Agnaf, Ganesh M. Shankar, Dominic M. Walsh
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
- 1995
Bruce Stillman
Structural Basis for the Proinflammatory Cytokine Activity of High Mobility Group Box 1
- 2003
Jianhua Li, Riikka Kokkola, Siamak Tabibzadeh, Runkuan Yang, Mahendar Ochani, Xiaoling Qiang, Helena Erlandsson Harris, Christopher J. Czura, Haichao Wang, Luis Ulloa, Hong Wang, H. Shaw Warren, Lyle L. Moldawer, Mitchell P. Fink, Ulf Andersson, Kevin J. Tracey, Huan Yang
A Paradoxical Role for Myeloid-Derived Suppressor Cells in Sepsis and Trauma
Tập 17 Số 3-4 - Trang 281-292 - 2011
Alex G. Cuenca, Matthew J. Delano, Kindra M. Kelly-Scumpia, Cláudia Roberta de Castro Moreno, Philip O. Scumpia, Drake LaFace, Paul G. Heyworth, Philip A. Efron, Lyle L. Moldawer
Monitoring Immune Dysfunctions in the Septic Patient: A New Skin for the Old Ceremony
Tập 14 Số 1-2 - Trang 64-78 - 2008
Guillaume Monneret, Fabienne Venet, Alexandre Pachot, Alain Lepape
Elevated Expression of Transforming Growth Factor-β in Adipose Tissue from Obese Mice
- 1997
Fahumiya Samad, Kōji Yamamoto, Manjula Pandey, David J. Loskutoff
Genes Involved in Viral Carcinogenesis and Tumor Initiation in Hepatitis C Virus-Induced Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Tập 15 Số 3-4 - Trang 85-94 - 2009
Valeria R. Mas, Daniel G. Maluf, Kellie J. Archer, Kenneth Yanek, Xiangrong Kong, Laura Kulik, Chris E. Freise, Kim M. Olthoff, Rafik M. Ghobrial, Paula McIver, Robert A. Fisher
The Alzheimer’s Disease-Associated Presenilins Are Differentially Phosphorylated Proteins Located Predominantly within the Endoplasmic Reticulum
Tập 2 Số 6 - Trang 673-691 - 1996
Jochen Walter, Anja Capell, Jürgen Grünberg, Brigitte Pesold, Alice Schindzielorz, Reinhard Prior, Marcia B. Podlisny, Paul Fraser, Peter St George‐Hyslop, Dennis J. Selkoe, Christian Haass
IP-10 and MCP-1 as biomarkers associated with disease severity of COVID-19
- 2020
Yu Chen, Jinglan Wang, Chenxi Liu, Longxiang Su, Dong Zhang, Jin‐Hu Fan, Yanli Yang, Meng Xiao, Jing Xie, Yingchun Xu, Yongzhe Li, Shuyang Zhang
Abstract Background

COVID-19 is a viral respiratory disease caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome-Coronavirus type 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Patients with this disease may be more prone to venous or arterial thrombosis because of the activation of many factors involved in it, including inflammation, platelet activation and endothelial dysfunction. Interferon gamma inducible protein-10 (IP-10), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) and macrophage inflammatory protein 1-alpha (MIP1α) are cytokines related to thrombosis. Therefore, this study focused on these three indicators in COVID-19, with the hope to find biomarkers that are associated with patients’ outcome.

Methods

This is a retrospective single-center study involving 74 severe and critically ill COVID-19 patients recruited from the ICU department of the Tongji Hospital in Wuhan, China. The patients were divided into two groups: severe patients and critically ill patients. The serum IP-10, MCP-1 and MIP1α level in both groups was detected using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit. The clinical symptoms, laboratory test results, and the outcome of COVID-19 patients were retrospectively analyzed.

Results

The serum IP-10 and MCP-1 level in critically ill patients was significantly higher than that in severe patients (P < 0.001). However, no statistical difference in MIP1α between the two groups was found. The analysis of dynamic changes showed that these indicators remarkably increased in patients with poor prognosis. Since the selected patients were severe or critically ill, no significant difference was observed between survival and death.

Conclusions

IP-10 and MCP-1 are biomarkers associated with the severity of COVID-19 disease and can be related to the risk of death in COVID-19 patients.